98 research outputs found
Evaluating Matrix Circuits
The circuit evaluation problem (also known as the compressed word problem)
for finitely generated linear groups is studied. The best upper bound for this
problem is , which is shown by a reduction to polynomial
identity testing. Conversely, the compressed word problem for the linear group
is equivalent to polynomial identity testing. In
the paper, it is shown that the compressed word problem for every finitely
generated nilpotent group is in . Within
the larger class of polycyclic groups we find examples where the compressed
word problem is at least as hard as polynomial identity testing for skew
arithmetic circuits
AND and/or OR: Uniform Polynomial-Size Circuits
We investigate the complexity of uniform OR circuits and AND circuits of
polynomial-size and depth. As their name suggests, OR circuits have OR gates as
their computation gates, as well as the usual input, output and constant (0/1)
gates. As is the norm for Boolean circuits, our circuits have multiple sink
gates, which implies that an OR circuit computes an OR function on some subset
of its input variables. Determining that subset amounts to solving a number of
reachability questions on a polynomial-size directed graph (which input gates
are connected to the output gate?), taken from a very sparse set of graphs.
However, it is not obvious whether or not this (restricted) reachability
problem can be solved, by say, uniform AC^0 circuits (constant depth,
polynomial-size, AND, OR, NOT gates). This is one reason why characterizing the
power of these simple-looking circuits in terms of uniform classes turns out to
be intriguing. Another is that the model itself seems particularly natural and
worthy of study.
Our goal is the systematic characterization of uniform polynomial-size OR
circuits, and AND circuits, in terms of known uniform machine-based complexity
classes. In particular, we consider the languages reducible to such uniform
families of OR circuits, and AND circuits, under a variety of reduction types.
We give upper and lower bounds on the computational power of these language
classes. We find that these complexity classes are closely related to tallyNL,
the set of unary languages within NL, and to sets reducible to tallyNL.
Specifically, for a variety of types of reductions (many-one, conjunctive truth
table, disjunctive truth table, truth table, Turing) we give characterizations
of languages reducible to OR circuit classes in terms of languages reducible to
tallyNL classes. Then, some of these OR classes are shown to coincide, and some
are proven to be distinct. We give analogous results for AND circuits. Finally,
for many of our OR circuit classes, and analogous AND circuit classes, we prove
whether or not the two classes coincide, although we leave one such inclusion
open.Comment: In Proceedings MCU 2013, arXiv:1309.104
The isomorphism conjecture for constant depth reductions
For any class C closed under TC0 reductions, and for any measure u of uniformity containing Dlogtime, it is shown that all sets complete for C under u-uniform AC0 reductions are isomorphic under u-uniform AC0-computable isomorphisms
The Complexity of Bisimulation and Simulation on Finite Systems
In this paper the computational complexity of the (bi)simulation problem over
restricted graph classes is studied. For trees given as pointer structures or
terms the (bi)simulation problem is complete for logarithmic space or NC,
respectively. This solves an open problem from Balc\'azar, Gabarr\'o, and
S\'antha. Furthermore, if only one of the input graphs is required to be a
tree, the bisimulation (simulation) problem is contained in AC (LogCFL). In
contrast, it is also shown that the simulation problem is P-complete already
for graphs of bounded path-width
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